The 6-foot-1, 190-pound senior shattered the 1,000-yard mark this season by gaining 156 yards on 24 carries in less than three quarters of work, scoring four TDs on runs of 1, 22, 30 and 3 yards.

In six games, Gallik has 1,029 yards and 16 TDs on 152 carries, averaging 6.8 yards per attempt. His 98 points is a new Lexington single-season scoring record, beating the old record of 96 shared by Steve Cockley (1967), Greg Elgin (1983) and Pat Falkosky (1986).

The Minutemen, scoring on their first three possessions, made it 28-0 at halftime when sophomore quarterback Courtney Avery hit senior wide receiver Mike McCabe on a 37-yard TD pass with 57 seconds showing in the half. Avery finished 7 of 9 passing for 98 yards.

On several of Gallik's runs, the Colts stopped him at the point of attack only to see him slip to the outside.

"They started cutting us, which more teams are starting to do," Payne said. "Our kids did a great job of adapting to it and Brad did a great job of bouncing it to the outside."

Clear Fork coach Rick Beans praised Gallik's efforts.

"He's as good as anyone we have seen this year. His biggest asset is when he runs off-tackle, he's got that bounceabilty to pop it outside," Beans said. "That's where you get into trouble ... when you shut off the off-tackle and come up to make the tackle and he skips it to the outside."

Beans said the Colts (3-3, 1-2) were not surprised by the Minutemen attack.

"I don't remember a single play tonight we hadn't seen on the several films we watched. They just executed very well tonight and were exceptional in the way they attacked us," he said.

The Colts, who managed just 146 yards in offense, got on the board in the fourth quarter after both teams substituted freely. Sophomore quarterback Travis Hissong led a 77-yard, 7-play drive that ended with a 21-yard TD pass to junior Zach Beahr.

Lexington, ranked 16th in the Division II state poll, hosts Wooster Friday before traveling to Madison and West Holmes. The Minutemen host Ashland (5-1, 3-0) in Week 10 in a game that could have league championship and playoff implications.

"Every team we have left to play does something different on offense," Payne said. "That's the great thing about the OCC. We're happy to be 3-0 in the league, but we know we have a lot of work to do."